Transcription

1 Follow Australian Medicine on Twitter: Medical training: time for action COAG must act now to head off intern, RMO crisis, p4 Inside Rush for the exits: Qld faces doctor exodus, p5 Last drinks: sport told to kick grog habit, p6 Offshore nip and tuck a risky cut, pp12-13 Trust a casualty in A Current Affair stunt, p14 Giving NDIS to Medibank Private a bad idea, p23 When disaster strikes, what should doctors do? p31 Issue november

2 A U S T R A L I A N Managing Editor: John Flannery Editor: Production Coordinator: Kirsty Waterford Contributors: Sanja Novakovic Graphic Design: Streamline Creative, Canberra Advertising enquiries Streamline Creative Tel: (02) Fax: (02) Australian Medicine is the na tion al news publication of the Australian Medical Association Limited. (ACN ) 42 Macquarie St, Barton ACT 2600 Telephone: (02) Facsimile: (02) Web: Australian Medicine welcomes diversity of opinion on national health issues. For this reason, published articles reflect the views of the authors and do not represent the official policy of the AMA unless stated. Contributions may be edited for clarity and length. Acceptance of advertising material is at the absolute discretion of the Editor and does not imply endorsement by the magazine or the AMA. All material in Australian Medicine remains the copyright of the AMA or the author and may not be reproduced without permission. The material in Australian Medicine is for general information and guidance only and is not intended as advice. No warranty is made as to the accuracy or currency of the information. The AMA, its servants and agents will not be liable for any claim, loss or damage arising out of reliance on the information in Australian Medicine. executive officers in this issue NEWS 4-21, REGULAR FEATURES 3 president s message 22 health on the hill 26 opinion 27 letter 28 general practice 29 AMSA 30 rural President Dr Steve Hambleton Chairman of Council Dr Iain Dunlop Vice President Prof Geoffrey Dobb Treasurer Dr Elizabeth Feeney 31 ethics and medico-legal 32 healthy ageing 33 research 38 members forum 40 book review 41 wine 42 Member services Executive Officer Dr Brian Owler Executive Officer Dr Stephen Parnis 2 australian medicine - november

3 president s message Good Advice Taken as Directed by AMA president dr steve hambleton The first clear evidence of how the incoming Health Minister, Peter Dutton, was going to settle into the role was seen last week with the announcement that 50 new and amended medicines have been added to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS). During the election campaign, the Coalition resolved to lift the Cabinet approval ceiling for the PBS to $20 million, restore efficiency to the listing process, and bring drugs to market more efficiently. All of these were supported by the AMA. Among the approvals was Dabrafenib, which targets a genetic mutation present in about half of melanoma cases; Sunitinib, which targets pancreatic cancer; and Denosumab was extended to men suffering osteoporosis. In total, around 230,000 people stand to benefit from these listings. In relation to medicines for the Australian market, the AMA has been a long term supporter of the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), which assesses therapeutic products for efficacy and safety before they are allowed to be registered and sold. The AMA also believes there is merit in the addition of some public funding to the TGA so it can increase the activities that it carries out in the public interest. Our Therapeutics Committee is currently looking into this. We also support the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC), which considers both the effectiveness and cost of the proposed drugs. I was a PBAC member in 2008 and After extensive analysis, PBAC makes a recommendation to the Minister for Health about which drugs and medicinal preparations should be subsidised by the Australian Government under the PBS. On many occasions in the past, we have seen delays in drugs getting subsidised by the PBS despite a positive recommendation from the PBAC. This was effectively shifting the decision about which drug to list from a group of highly trained medical and pharmaceutical professionals, supported by economists, to a group of Cabinet politicians who we would not expect to have the required professional expertise, but who should at least have the very best expert advice. The most obvious example of a delayed listing was Pradaxa which, after an extended period of time, was finally listed for our patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation. The cost- effectiveness analysis carried out by PBAC, to which all drugs are subjected, helps to maximise the benefits of the particular drug when it is prescribed within the recommendations. We currently spend over $8 billion a year on pharmaceuticals and, up until recently, the price was rising very fast. The rigorous listing process ensures that when drugs become available we are paying the right price. But the PBS repricing process has meant long delays in realising the savings to the PBS when generics are introduced into the market at the end of patent protection of the parent drug. As we know, this has resulted in Australia paying much more for some drugs than many countries around the world and, indeed, multiples of what is paid for drugs like statins in New Zealand. What we need is a more efficient feedback loop to allow the price falls that are occurring due to increased competition to be passed on to the Australian community. In fact, in these current economic times, it is really the cost savings from the introduction of generic statins and other drugs that have provided the fiscal headroom to be able to afford the listing and subsidisation of the drugs mentioned above. We need to continue to improve the cost-saving efficiency if we are to be able to list new drugs for the use of the Australian population in a timely way. It should be abolished immediately. This would free up the equivalent of up to 25,000 patient consultations while doctors wait for their calls to be answered In relation to pharmaceutical benefits and red tape, one of the biggest time wasters in medical practice is the long wait for phone authority prescriptions. It has been estimated that up to six million phone calls are made every year to the PBS authority line. Waiting on the phone for someone to answer wastes an enormous amount of time. We don t know of any evidence that suggests abolishing the authority approvals process would cause a blowout in costs. It should be abolished immediately. This would free up the equivalent of up to 25,000 patient consultations while doctors wait for their calls to be answered. AMA Secretary General Anne Trimmer and I have already raised this issue with the Health Minister, who is intending to take a close look at this it. No more hanging on the telephone? Let s hope. australian medicine - november

4 NEWS Act now to prevent training crisis, govts told The AMA has called on the nation s Health Ministers to act immediately to head off a looming critical shortage of medical training places that threatens to derail the careers of hundreds of aspiring doctors and undermine efforts to improve access to health care. AMA President Dr Steven Hambleton and Chair of the AMA Council of Doctors in Training Dr Will Milford have written to the nation s Federal, State and Territory Health Ministers urging them to begin work on a national medical training plan when they meet later this month. Dr Hambleton and Dr Milford said that the plight of around 20 Tasmanian interns and resident medical officers (RMOs), who have failed to secure training places next year to continue their studies, highlighted increasingly severe shortcomings in the medical training pipeline that threaten to derail efforts to boost doctor numbers and prematurely snuff out the careers of dozens, if not hundreds, of medical graduates. The senior AMA officials warned of a growing bulge of RMOs seeking registrar positions, and said the potential for locally-trained doctors to miss out on a training position was extremely troubling. In their letter, Dr Hambleton and Dr Milford said that although each Government was working to provide more prevocational and specialist training places, this is being done in a very unplanned and uncoordinated way that is not necessarily matched to community need. The AMA Council of Doctors in Training, which met late last month, said the forthcoming Standing Council on Health meeting was a critical opportunity to immediately begin work on a national medical training plan. Speaking following the Council meeting, AMA Vice President Professor Geoffrey Dobb said the crisis in medical training was not only a tragedy for those graduates denied the opportunity to complete their studies, but was a serious problem for the country as it tried to address shortages and gaps in the medical workforce, now and in the future. The Health Workforce Australia Health Workforce 2025 report last year warned that Australia needed to increase prevocational and specialist training places for doctors if the medical workforce is to meet future community need, Professor Dobb said. In its report, HWA warned the nation was facing a shortage of 2700 doctors by 2025 unless there was nationally coordinated reform of the medical training system. The pressure on prevocational and specialty training places has intensified sharply in the past nine years as the number of medical graduates has soared, from just 1287 in 2004 to more 3100 last year, and is expected to reach 3970 in Federal, State and Territory governments reached a temporary, last-minute deal late last year to avert a critical shortage in training places for 2013 that potentially would have left more than 100 medical graduates stranded, and Dr Milford has urged against a repeat of such ad hoc solutions. Both he and Dr Hambleton have written to the Australian Health Ministers Advisory Committee seeking details on the number of RMO and registrar positions that each State and Territory will offer next year. The AMA officials also questioned the continued influx of junior doctors from overseas, with currently around 1550 RMOs employed on 457 visas. Given the growing number of Australian-trained doctors seeking RMO and registrar positions, it is very difficult to understand why so many temporary resident doctors are still being used to fill local vacancies, they wrote. The AMA has backed proposals from HWA for the establishment of a National Medical Training Advisory Network to improve the coordination of the medical training pipeline, and wants this month s meeting of Health Ministers to agree to commence work on a five-year national medical training program. We understand these proposals will be on the agenda at the Health Ministers meeting, and the AMA and the AMACDT urge all governments to adopt both proposals and start work on them straight away, Professor Dobb said, adding that a national training plan was first promised by the end of 2011, and we are still waiting. The Australian community cannot afford any more delays with this important work, he said. 4 australian medicine - november

5 NEWS Flawed Qld contracts could spark rush for hospital exits There could be a mass exodus of doctors from the Queensland public hospital system unless draconian changes to employment conditions are quickly reversed, the AMA has warned. The warning followed a decision by the Queensland Government to scrap its existing enterprise agreement with public hospital Senior Medical Officers and instead place them on individual employment contracts. In a meeting convened soon after the Government s announcement, the AMA Council of Salaried Doctors said the contracts being offered were unbalanced and unfair, and could force doctors into private practice or convince them to leave the State altogether. The meeting, which included senior public hospital doctors from around the country, unanimously condemned the proposed changes due to come into effect from 1 July next year as a retrograde step that would harm public hospital doctors and their patients. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said the proposed contracts would strip away key provisions in existing employment agreements regarding the management of doctor fatigue, including mandated rest breaks and limits on hours, as well as robbing doctors of important workplace rights such as access to dispute resolution and unfair dismissal procedures. Dr Hambleton warned that the change could lead to an exodus of senior doctors from Queensland public hospitals. The proposed new individual contracts will strip away key employment rights and undermine the progress Queensland has made in growing its public sector medical workforce, the AMA President said. These draconian contracts will remove key protections such as fatigue provisions and rest breaks, limits on hours, access to unfair dismissal, dispute resolution and grievance procedures. The changes are at odds with the rest of the country, and raise genuine serious concerns that many Senior Medical Officers in Queensland will move interstate or abandon the public hospital system to work in private practice. But Queensland Health Minister Lawrence Springborg has so far defied calls to reverse the decision, declaring the change in employment terms had been forced on the Government by a spiralling overtime bill for public hospital specialists. Mr Springborg told ABC Radio that there was an extraordinary amount of overtime being done that we didn t have the accountabilities around it that were necessary. We did need to do something to control that, and that s what we will be doing, the Minister said. A spokesman for Mr Springborg told The Australian the individual contracts would abide by the published policies of Queensland Health and Hospital and Health Services, including those regarding fatigue management. The spokesman said the contract would ensure doctors got paid for the work they performed, and would include annualised payments for on-call and overtime. But Dr Hambleton said the Government needed to reconsider the change. He said successive enterprise agreements had helped to deliver a substantial boost in the number of Senior Medical Officers working in Queensland, and warned the proposed individual contracts would undo much of this progress. If the Newman Government proceeds with these ideologically-driven changes, Queenslanders will soon find it much harder to access care in their local public hospital, and they will experience longer waiting times, the AMA President said. australian medicine - november

6 NEWS Sport told its time for last drinks The AMA is at the forefront of efforts to get the sports industry to kick its alcohol habit, calling for an inquiry into alcohol advertising and promotion and backing far-reaching changes to the taxation of wine. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said there was an urgent need to reconsider the way alcohol was marketed and promoted in Australia, particularly through sport. Young Australians are exposed to an unprecedented level of advertising that glorifies alcohol, Dr Hambleton said. He was commenting on the release of research commissioned by The Salvation Army that showed significant community concern about the strong links between alcohol and sport. Seventy-two per cent of adults surveyed by Roy Morgan Research said they thought alcohol and sport had become too closely related, 70 per cent thought it was encouraging young people to drink, and 67 per cent thought it was time to start phasing alcohol sponsorship of sport out. Australia is a sporting nation, and the alcohol industry concentrates a lot of its promotional and sponsorship activity on live broadcasts of the most prominent 6 australian 6 medicine - november and popular sporting events, including grand finals that are watched by millions of people, Dr Hambleton said, with products promoted during ad breaks, on sporting grounds, on billboards and on players jerseys. The AMA President said there was strong evidence that the more young people were exposed to alcohol advertising, the earlier and more heavily they drank. Associating alcohol with sport sends a clear message to young people that drinking and sport go together. But sports organisations so far appear unrepentant about their strong links with the alcohol industry and its sponsorship money. Last month Cricket Australia refused to run an advertisement declaring Alcohol and sports don t mix during the Ryobi Cup in Sydney, while Cricket NSW has just signed a three-year sponsorship deal with Carlton & United Breweries, which has also secured naming rights for the upcoming one-day international series between Australia and England. A Cricket Australia spokesman told The Sydney Morning Herald that it was justified in rejecting an ad with a message that it saw as at odds with its own position on alcohol consumption and sport. It is better to engage with the reality that many fans enjoy a responsible drink than it is to turn them off with a prohibition message they don t believe, the spokesman said. Meanwhile, the Federal Government said it had no current plans to alter the taxation regime for alcohol. It was responding to a call from the National Alliance for Action on Alcohol, of which the AMA is a member, to replace the current wine equalisation tax with a tax on alcohol by volume, which it has been estimated would collect an extra $1.32 billion in tax revenue from the wine industry. While the alcohol industry is so far successfully resisting efforts to change its taxation or curb its sports sponsorship, it faces the likelihood that in future it will have to include the energy content of its product on its labels. Food Standards Australia and New Zealand has commissioned a cost-benefit analysis of a proposal that the kilojoule content of packaged wine, beer and spirits be inscribed on the packaging.

7 news ama in the news Your AMA has been active on policy and in the media on a range of issues crucial to making our health system better. Below is a snapshot of recent media coverage. Print/Online Gap growing for patients as GPs lift fees, Adelaide Advertiser, 16 October 2013 The value of Medicare rebates will plummet, covering less than half the cost of seeing a doctor from next month. The AMA has recommended that doctors raise fees from $71 to $73 from November 1. Seniors may skip doctors, Canberra Times, 17 October 2013 The AMA has advised its members to increase standard GP consultation rates by $2, claiming the rebate has failed to keep up with increasing practice costs. Why those who care also need caring, Adelaide Advertiser, 18 October 2013 The AMA used Carer s Week to call for greater support for respite programs for carers. GPs claim bulk billing rates will fall, Australian Financial Review, 19 October 2013 Doctors claim bulk billing rates at general practices will fall from record highs, and some practices will have to close, if the Government does not reverse a freeze on Medicare rebates. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said the freeze on rebates was putting pressure on already thin operating margins for GPs. Their shout: cricketers toast brewery s deal, Sydney Morning Herald, 19 October 2013 Alcohol remains a fraught issue for those who run cricket. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said young people are exposed to unprecedented levels of alcohol advertising. The obesity sickness, Hobart Mercury, 19 October 2013 Obese Australians should be treated as if they have a disease and have their treatment subsidised by Medicare, said the AMA. Ban booze adverts in sport, Adelaide Advertiser, 21 October 2013 The Federal Government has been urged to review alcohol advertising at sporting events amid concerns children are being encouraged to drink. The AMA has previously encouraged sporting codes to dump their reliance on alcohol companies for sponsorship. Big data will reduce errors in patient care, Australian Financial Review, 22 October 2013 With 9.3 per cent of Australia s gross domestic product spent on health care, there is significant scope for improvement in productivity to drive better health outcomes, a conference on the future of health care was told. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said the key to extracting better productivity within the health care sector was through digitisation. To chart the nation s health, Australian Financial Review, 22 October 2013 Better use of data could be used to support preventive health efforts a proposal that is only given tacit attention in health policy debates. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said Australia s health system was exceptionally good at acute care, but there was a need to make sure there was sufficient investment at the front end of health care. Medibank sale has advisers circling, The Australian, 24 October 2013 Investment banks are salivating over the government s move to assess a $4 billion float of Medibank Private. The privatisation plan drew opposition from the AMA and the federal Opposition amid claims it would put upward pressure on health insurance premiums. NDIS will be a struggle for Medibank: AMA, Australian Financial Review, 26 October 2013 The AMA is concerned Medibank Private would struggle to manage the administrative responsibilities of the National Disability Insurance Scheme based on its substandard record in coordinating health care services for the Australian Defence Force. Radio Dr Steve Hambleton, ABC Southern Queensland, 21 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton discussed the electronic health record system. He said that one million people have signed up for the electronic records, but that only 5000 have clinically important information listed. Dr Steve Hambleton, 2GB Sydney, 21 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton discussed alcohol advertising and promotion. He said a Salvation Army survey had shown that there is a significant community concern about the links between alcohol and sport. Dr Steve Hambleton, 2UE Sydney, 22 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton discussed the dangers of inhaling bushfire smoke and advised people to avoid it. He said people who already had chronic lung conditions were at risk....continued on page 8 australian medicine - november

8 news ama in the news...continued from page 7 Dr Steve Hambleton, 891 ABC Adelaide, 22 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton discussed joint replacements. He said in Australia there are more than 80,000 joint replacements annually. Dr Steve Hambleton, 666 ABC Canberra, 23 October 2013 Senior medical officers in the Queensland public hospital system are protesting against what they say is the return of Work Choices. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said there was a serious concern doctors will leave the Queensland public health sector as a result of the new contracts. Dr Steve Hambleton, 2CC Canberra, 24 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton discussed the sale of Medibank Private. He said if Medibank Private was bought by another health insurer then competition would decrease. Dr Steve Hambleton, 4BC Brisbane, 26 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton discussed a plan by private health insurer NIB to market packages for off-shore surgical procedures. He said that people have been going offshore for cheaper surgery for some time, but the AMA was concerned about the trend because of frequent complications and poor patient outcomes. Dr Steve Hambleton, 666 ABC Canberra, 28 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton expressed concern about a proposed policy by a private health insurer to introduce insurance packages to cover medical tourism. He said medical training in Australia was world class, and the country did not have the multiresistant bugs that existed in other parts of the world. TV Dr Steve Hambleton, Channel 7 Brisbane, 17 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton expressed concerns about chiropractors practicing on infants and young children. He said there was no credible scientific evidence that chiropractic treatment of infants and children was of benefit. Dr Steve Hambleton, ABC News 24, 23 October 2013 AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton discussed health concerns for those dealing with the NSW bushfires. He said there has been a large increase in hospital emergency department presentations associated with inhaling smoke, particularly among those with conditions such as asthma. Dr Steve Hambleton, ABC1 Canberra, 29 October 2013 The ABC resisted pressure to withdraw a program that was part of a series calling into question the scientific evidence linking cholesterol to heart disease. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said the AMA welcomed the debate. INFORMATION FOR MEMBERS Free tool to track registration requirements The AMA has developed a free online tool to help doctors to keep track of the information they need to meet the Medical Board of Australia s annual continuing professional development CPD requirements. Each September, practitioners, when renewing their Medical Board registration, may be required to provide evidence they have complied with the Board s CPD requirements. The AMA CPD Tracker has been developed to enable doctors to progressively gather and organise the information needed to substantiate declarations made to the Board about CPD, so that evidence can be quickly and easily produced on demand. The AMA CPD Tracker can be used to: List courses completed, including the organisation that accredited the CPD activity; Store all certificates of completion; Keep a log of practice-based reflective activities, including clinical audits, peer reviews and perfomance appraisals; and Log hours spent on online learning, reading journals, teaching and other activities. The system keeps a tally of hours, enabling practitioners to keep track of what needs to be completed before the end of the registration year. The Tracker has been developed taking full account of the requirements set out in the Medical Board s Continuing Professional Development Registration Standard. The service is free to AMA members. Non-members can subscribe for an annual fee of $250. To register for the product, please sign up here. 8 australian medicine - november

9 news AMA in action Dr Hambleton started his fortnight in Canberra meeting with the AMA Executive Council, which discussed developments in national health policy along with internal AMA matters. Dr Hambleton was also busy in the media, including providing advice about the danger posed by inhaling bushfire smoke and the risks involved in medical tourism, before finishing the week by attending an AMA Council of General Practice Committee meeting. Dr Hambleton met with AMA Queensland President Dr Christian Rowan to tour Greenslopes - Australia s largest private hospital with CEO Mark Page, Dr Jim Houston Director of Medical Services and, Carmel Monaghan, Marketing & Public Affairs Manager. The Government funded 100 internship placements at the hospital and Dr Hambleton was shown how the hospital was integrating students into their every day practices. Earlier in the month, Dr Hambleton was a participant in the Australia 2.0 forum, an initiative of The Australian Financial Review which brought together policymakers and industry and business leaders to discuss issues regarding the future of health care, energy, productivity and infrastructure. He also attended GP13, the annual conference of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, which was held at the Darwin Convention Centre. Former AMA President Dr Andrew Pesce attended the World Medical Association Conference in Brazil last month, which was chaired by former AMA President Dr Mukesh Haikerwal. AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton at the Australia 2.0 initiative Dr Hambleton with Dr David Cooper (right) CEO of AMSANT, John Patterson and Chair of AMSANT Shawn Hefferen Dr Hambleton with AMA NT President Dr Peter Beaumont australian medicine - november

11 news The World Medical Association General Assembly in session, Fortaleza, Brazil Dr Hambleton on ABC 24 Dr Hambleton with Dr Liz Marles RACGP President (left) and Dr Eleanor Chew AMA Council of General Practice australian medicine - november

12 news Offshore nip and tuck a risky cut: AMA The AMA has raised concerns about a plan by one of the nation s largest health insurers to offer packages for patients to have cosmetic surgery and other medical procedures performed overseas. The Australian newspaper has revealed that health fund NIB has developed plans to cash in on the medical tourism market, providing packages for customers who want medical work done at a cheaper price offshore, particularly Asia. NIB Managing Director Mark Fitzgibbon told the newspaper that, from next year, customers would be able to buy packages for cosmetic surgery and dental work to be performed by doctors in Malaysia, Indonesia and other Asian countries. We re building a medical travel business here, Mr Fitzgibbon told The Australian. We don t like the word tourism we think that has the wrong connotations. We will provide you with the opportunity to relax and recuperate at a nice resort, maybe, but it s not a holiday. According to the paper, NIB will offer packages that include flights, accommodation, treatment and a concierge to make arrangements. The packages will not be restricted to NIB members. Mr Fitzgibbon said the packages would include assurances regarding safety and quality. But AMA President Dr Steve Hambleton said there were significant concerns about the standard of care patients would receive. Dr Hambleton said that medical training and accreditation standards in Australia were among the most stringent in the world, and although there were some excellent surgeons in Asia, there were not the same system-wide assurances of the quality of care. The AMA President said those considering going offshore for medical treatment should take into account more than just the price. It s not just the price. It s really the followup, it s really the quality, and it s really all of those other things that wrap around [it], Dr Hambleton told ABC radio. It s probably a truism, that you do get what you pay for. He said there were multiple requirements and standards that meant the quality of care provided in Australia was world-class, including post-operative care in the event of complications. You can get treatment right here and be pretty confident that you re going to get high standards of medical practitioners, Dr Hambleton said. Our training is very, very high in terms of world standards. You know that the hospital you go to is accredited, and that it has good infection control systems, and those are at a world standard. The AMA President said it was also important to look at why people wanted to have cosmetic surgery, whether it be in Australia or overseas. He said there was a preoccupation, including among young men and women, with having the perfect face or figure, and we need to think about their body image issues. Maybe the right answer is to say, You don t need the surgery at all. This isn t going to solve your problem. INFORMATION FOR MEMBERS Free urological advice for GPs General practitioners are being offered free, practical advice on how to assess patients who may be at risk of prostate cancer at a joint University of Melbourne- Austin Hospital symposium. The one-day Urology in General Practice symposium, being held at Melbourne s Grand Hyatt Hotel on 9 November, addresses a number of urological issues commonly encountered in general practice, including the vexed issue of when to test for prostate specific antigen (PSA), and how to interpret and act on the results. Convenor Professor Damien Bolton, Director of Urology at Austin Hospital, said GPs and patients were being confronted with a multitude of guidelines on PSA screening that made it particularly confusing. It is hard to expect a patient to make an accurate judgement on a health test when medical practitioners continue to disagree on when to apply it, Professor Bolton said. The symposium will provide actionable guidance for GPs on the use of PSA. There is a need to separate testing and diagnosis of prostate cancer from subsequent aggressive treatment. He said the PSA test was not really useful for men younger than 45 years and older than 75 years, and a number of biomarkers, including the Prostate Health Index (PHI), had been developed to confirm the need for a biopsy where PSA has been found to be elevated. PHI provides a clear indication of the risk of prostate cancer in patients, Professor Bolton said. The test is relevant for patients where the PSA is high, where there is a family history of prostate cancer, or where an earlier biopsy is negative but PSA continues to rise. PHI can indicate which patients will be best served by biopsy. The symposium will also include sessions on the use of green light lasers as an alternative to transurethral resection of the prostate, as well as new therapies for treating premature ejaculation and the management of symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia. To register, go to: 12 australian medicine - november

13 news The ugly side of medical tourism A woman with a badly disfigured nose following cosmetic surgery in Thailand (left and centre), and following restorative surgery by Dr Nicholas Moncrieff (right) For surgeon Dr Nicholas Moncrieff and his colleagues at Hunter Plastic Surgery, the sight of women disfigured by botched cosmetic operations overseas is a distressingly common one. Almost every week the clinic, based in Charleston, just outside Newcastle, gets a new patient upset with the results of substandard procedures that have left them with collapsed noses, scarred faces, misaligned breasts and nipples or skewed belly buttons. Among recent cases was a 40-year-old woman who went to Thailand for cosmetic surgery, including the insertion of a silicon implant in her nose to give it more projection. It subsequently became badly infected and exposed, leaving her with a serious defect (see picture above). Dr Moncrieff had to operate on her in hospital to remove foreign matter, repair the hole and use filler to fill the cavity. The surgeon said the vast majority of such cases involved patients who had gone to Thailand for cosmetic surgery, lured by cheap prices. In Thailand it typically costs around $4000 to $6000 to have breast augmentation surgery, compared with $11,000 at Hunter Plastic Surgery. But Dr Moncrieff said people who chose where to have surgery based simply on price did not fully realise the sort of risks they were taking. I think it [plastic surgery] has been a little trivialised because it has become commonplace, he said. This is surgery, it is still an operation on your body, and people think it s like a haircut. Often, cosmetic procedures performed overseas are much more radical than clinics like Hunter Plastic Surgery would undertake, such as inserting very large breast implants in women with small frames, leading to complications such as sore backs or infection because sutures are put under enormous strain. Dr Moncrieff said any surgery, no matter where it was performed, carried with it the risk of complications, but when it was conducted overseas the burden for rectifying any mistakes fell on the Australian health system. He said patients were often told by their Thai doctors that any complications could be addressed for free in Australia under Medicare, and public hospitals in his area regularly had to treat women who had become badly infected following cosmetic surgery performed overseas. But he warned that this did not extend to rectifying elective cosmetic problems, such as facial scarring or nipples in the wrong place. As an example, the woman who had to have her botched nose surgery repaired spent more than $3000 on the repair work far more than it would have cost to have the procedure performed locally in the first place. She was able to claim back just $750 of the cost through Medicare. Dr Moncrieff said it could cost up to $19,000 to repair botched breast augmentation procedures, a sum that was prohibitively expensive for many women who had had such work overseas in the first place because of price, and who usually had no private health cover. He said in this instance, they often had to live with the disfigurement until they could save the money to have it repaired, either in Australia or in the country where the procedure was originally carried out. Dr Moncrieff said his concern with the cosmetic tourism trade was not driven by self-interest we are plenty busy enough without having to fix these problems but by the burden it was placing on taxpayers and the health system. We think the Australian Government should be asking questions about how complications will be managed [under the NIB scheme] once the patient is back in Australia and who will be paying for them, especially those treated for life-threatening illnesses in public hospitals he said. australian medicine - november

14 news Trust a casualty in television show stunt When a young man professing to be tired and stressed walked into the consulting room of Dr David Chambers on 1 October and asked for a medical certificate, the Brisbane GP took his patient at his word and began trying to delve into reasons for his condition. During the consultation, the man who was accompanied by a woman said he was fatigued and, according to Dr Chambers, looked anxious and avoided eye contact. Little did Dr Chambers know that he was being secretly filmed as part of a set-up by the Channel Nine television show A Current Affair for a story intended to show that doctors readily issued medical certificates to patients who simply wanted a day off work. The patient was in fact a producer from the program, as was the woman who accompanied him. When the story was broadcast the following night, the 16-anda-half minute consultation - in which Dr Chambers made a thorough examination of his patient, took a full history, organised for blood tests to be taken if the professed fatigue persisted, and discussed mental health issues was edited down to a brief grab intended to justify the story s premise. Dr Chambers was among five GPs caught up in the ACA sting, and although their faces were disguised in the story that went to air, he found that both colleagues and patients quickly recognised him. Aside from the anger he feels about being hugely misrepresented by the program, Dr Chambers worries about the corrosive effect this and similar programs might have on the crucial doctor-patient relationship. Doctors are rightly held to high moral and ethical standards, treating patients with respect and trust, and protecting their privacy, he said. But it is also incumbent upon the patient to be truthful with the doctor. Most of what we do is based on good history taking, and we rely on patients being honest with us. We are not mindreaders. If you don t have that trust, then everything is lost. Dr Chambers said programs like the ACA segment had the potential to be quite destructive, because they devalue that relationship. It is a concern shared by AMA Council of General Practice Chair Dr Brian Morton, who said that trust and honesty were paramount in the relationship between doctors and their patients. Our profession expects honesty from our patients. Communications between the patient and the doctor involve honesty from the patient and, reciprocally, from the doctor, Dr Morton said. We cannot mistrust what the patient is saying. The importance of this was underlined, he said, by the experience of a colleague who treated a patient complaining that they were hearing a cricket in their ear. Rather than dismiss the complaint as a case of tinnitus, the doctor made an examination and found that there actually was an insect inside the man s ear. Commenting on the premise of the ACA report, Dr Morton said medical certificates were legal documents, and doctors did not issue them lightly. But equally, they were not simply for physical maladies, as the television show seemed to imply. Dr Chapman said he had treated a number of young men with depression who had presented with symptoms similar to those described by the ACA producer, and was alert to the possibility his patient was suffering mental health problems. Dr Morton said often doctors had to use judgement and care in what they wrote on medical certificates. He said privacy considerations and stigma surrounding conditions such as mental illness or sexually transmitted infections meant it was not unreasonable for doctors to talk with their patients about what should be included when writing a certificate. Dr Morton admitted that he did, on occasion, come under pressure from patients to issue a certificate, either claiming to be suffering a cold or even not providing any medical reason for their absence from work. In this situation, it behoves me to make a medical examination, take a history, and come to my own conclusion, he said. Doctors are expected to take a professional and legal view. The egregious shortcomings of the ACA report which included file footage of Dr Morton without indicating to viewers that it was from an interview given more than two years ago were highlighted by ABC s Media Watch program on 14 and 21 October. Dr Chambers provided an account of his experience to Media Watch, and has written a formal complaint to Channel Nine. 14 australian medicine - november

15 news Thousands forego vital cancer screen Thousands of breast cancers are going undetected because more than a million women each year fail to have a mammogram. Breast screening figures released by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare show that 45 per cent of women aged between 50 and 69 years did not have a free mammogram in , meaning that potentially more than 3000 breast cancers went undetected. Though many women, particularly those who live in remote areas, are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander, or do not speak English as a first language, still are not being regularly screened, the program has nonetheless saved thousands of lives through the early detection of the deadly cancer. All up, 1.3 million women 55 per cent of the target 50 to 69 year age group were screened for breast cancer in , and the disease was detected in around 290 of every 100,000 people examined. Significantly, screening has proven to be effective at detecting breast cancer at an early stage of development, when treatment is likely to be most effective. The Institute found that in half of all cases where cancer was detected in women being screened for the first time, it was small (less than 15 millimetres in diameter), and among those with cancer being screened a second time or more, the detection rate was even higher 63 per cent. The significance of early detection is that it greatly increases the likelihood of effective treatment and survival. According to the report, BreastScreen Australia Monitoring Report , 61 per cent of breast cancers detected by the program are small, compared with less than 30 per cent of those diagnosed in other circumstances. The success of the program has been underlined by figures showing that, since free breast screening was introduced in 1991, the breast cancer mortality rate has fallen from 68 per 100,000 women to 43 per 100,000. This has been largely attributed to the early detection of cancers through screening practice, along with advances in management and treatment, the Institute said. Despite advances in detection and treatment, breast cancer still claims hundreds of lives every year. In 2010, 1098 women aged between 50 and 69 years died from breast cancer, making it the second-most common cause of cancerrelated death after lung cancer. Public health experts have expressed particular concern about the relatively low rates of breast cancer screening among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women. In , just 36 per cent of Indigenous women in the target age group had a mammogram, compared with 54 per cent of those from other backgrounds. A booklet designed to help inform and support Indigenous women about breast cancer, including its detection, treatment and follow-up care, was last week launched by Health Minister Peter Dutton. Mr Dutton said breast cancer was the most commonly diagnosed cancer among Indigenous women, and they currently faced significantly worse survival prospects compared with the broader community. Between 2006 and 2010, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women had lower five-year crude survival for breast cancer than non-indigenous women 69 per cent and 83 per cent respectively, the Minister said. He said the booklet My Breast Cancer Journey: a guide for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women, had been developed by Cancer Australia with funding from the Commonwealth to help improve those odds. australian medicine - november

16 news Nation switches off solariums Commercial sunbeds are set to be banned virtually nationwide by 2015 after Queensland and Western Australia indicated they would join other states and territories in outlawing commercial solariums. In a move welcomed by doctors and anti-cancer groups, Queensland Health Minister Lawrence Springborg and WA Health Minister Dr Kim Hames last month announced that their governments were moving to prohibit commercial UV tanning products, bringing them into line with similar measures in New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory. Mr Springborg said his State had not issued any new licences for commercial sunbeds since late last year, and Queensland s 44 existing licensed operators have been given 14 months notice of a full ban, to come into effect from December 31, In WA, Dr Hames told Fairfax radio he was formulating a similar policy that would be presented to State Cabinet within three months. I have to take it to Cabinet, but if it happens it will happen in the next three months, Dr Hames said. There is no doubt about the increased risk of cancer - so I think the chances are [a ban in WA] won t be far away. The moves mean that soon the Northern Territory will be the only jurisdiction in Australia where commercial solariums and sunbeds are not banned. The dangers of using sunbeds and solariums have been known for more than 10 years. In 2000, the US Department of Health listed solariums as a known human carcinogen linked to malignant melanoma of the skin and eye. A systematic review of research on the link between skin cancer and solarium use, published in the British Medical Journal last year, concluded any sunbed use increased the risk of melanoma by 20 per cent, and raised it by three times that amount of the exposure was before 35 years of age. Furthermore, the risk increased with each sunbed session. The Cancer Council has warned that solariums are not a safe way to tan, and can result in serious damage to your skin. Just like the sun, solariums emit UVA and UVB radiation, which can damage skin and cause skin cancer. UV radiation from solariums can be just as intense, if not more so, than natural light, it said. The health risks associated issue of solariums gained national prominence in 2007 when 26-year-old Clare Oliver, suffering endstage melanoma, delivered a heartfelt public warning on the made an advertisement warning of the dangers of tanning, including through the use of commercial sunbeds. The following year, the Victorian Government introduced laws to regulate the industry before moving to a full ban, to take effect from 31 December next year. 16 australian medicine - november

17 news Medical errors will cost major hospital operator A major private hospital operator has agreed to forgo payment from insurer Bupa if any of its members are harmed by serious medical errors at any of its institutions. In an agreement lauded as setting a new quality benchmark for care in the private hospital system, hospital operator Healthscope and Bupa have agreed on a list of 14 medical errors, dubbed never events, that should not occur. Under the terms of the agreement, when a never event involving a Bupa member does occur, and is found to be the hospital s fault, the health fund will withhold payment. The types of error covered by the agreement include patients being transfused with the wrong blood, surgery being conducted on the wrong body part, a medication error resulting in serious disability, or surgical instruments or medical supplies being left in the body, requiring follow-up surgery to remove it. Healthscope Managing Director Robert Crooke said his company was confident in the quality of care it provided, and the agreement set a framework which could eventually lead to reward payments for above-standard care. Never events are essentially the reverse of being paid for quality, Mr Cooke said. If a never event occurs in a Healthscope hospital, and it is due to hospital error, then we do not expect to receive payment from Bupa. We are prepared to stand by our commitment to quality and safety. Bupa Chief Medical Officer Dr Paul Bates said the agreement with Healthscope was an important innovation in lifting the standard of care. This shared commitment leads the industry in terms of improving hospital outcomes for patients, which is something the industry has grappled with for many years, Dr Bates said. Mr Cooke said the agreement with Bupa provided a blueprint that could be adopted across the private health sector. There is currently no industry-wide agreement on what should happen in the rare instance when a never event occurs, he said. We hope that this agreement will drive change and set a precedent for the consistent provision of health care. So-called never events are rare, but their effects can be devastating for patients and their families. A similar scheme in the United States found that 0.6 per cent of all hospital patients suffered such an error in their care, and a 2006 study estimated that such mistakes cost the country more than $2.2 billion a year. A Productivity Commission report found that in , there were 26 incidents in public hospitals where surgical instruments or materials were left in the body of a patient and had to be retrieved, as well as 13 instances where the wrong medication was given to a patient, resulting in their death. Other serious errors included operations on the wrong part of the body, intravascular gas embolisms, and suicides of hospital inpatients. Health Minister Peter Dutton told The Australian he welcomed the initiative, which should serve as an example to others in the private health industry. I think it brings pressure on to the other providers to be more transparent in the data that they release, Mr Dutton said. If we can bring that pressure to bear on both the public and private systems, we will end up with better health outcomes. The Healthscope-Bupa agreement came as more than 50 leading international health care providers, suppliers and operators urged the universal adoption of the GS1 System of Standards as the global benchmark for the health care supply chain. GS1 is a not-for-profit global standards organisation supported by an international network of health and medical manufacturers, suppliers, providers, industry associations and regulatory bodies, and is intended to develop and implement uniform global standards governing the manufacturing and distribution of health and medical supplies. australian medicine - november

18 news New course charted in embolism treatment Practitioners will be prompted to assess the blood clot risk of patients in an update to standardised inpatient medication charts. As part of efforts to reduce the incidence of hospital-associated venous thromboembolism (VTE), the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care has decided to incorporate a form on the condition in the National Inpatient Medication Chart (NIMC), following a two-year pilot study. The Commission s Chief Executive Officer, Professor Debora Picone, said the pilot study had found a significant improvement in documenting the risk of VTE and appropriate prescribing when a chart on the condition was included in the NIMC. The chart is designed to prompt and document VTE risk assessment and contraindications, as well as record any drugs or mechanical aids ordered or administered. Its incorporation in the NIMC is seen as an important step in improving the identification of VTE risk and its treatment. The NIMC is a standardised set of medication charts that ensure a consistent format for patient information shared between health workers practitioners. It was introduced in 2006 as part of a national strategy to cut down on medicine errors in acute care, and its use in mandatory in hospitals accredited under National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards. Under the change, all short-stay NIMCs for adult inpatients, (including a version designed to be incorporated in GP electronic prescribing software for inpatients prescribed medicines by a GP), will include the VTE chart. A modified version of the prophylaxis section of the chart, which only includes space for documenting the assessment of VTE risk and contraindications, will also be included in the outpatient version of the NIMC. Professor Picone said the VTE chart would not be included in the long-stay NIMC for stable, acute adult inpatients, nor in the long and short-stay version of the NIMC for paediatric patients. Copies of the new NIMC can be downloaded from: medicatioon-safety/medication-chart/ An online training guide for use of the NIMC is at: professional-development/online-learning Sex diseases rise as men play casual There has been a big upsurge in the prevalence of sexually transmitted diseases in a sign that the safe sex message is wearing off. Figures presented to the Australasian Sexual Health Conference late last month showed that diagnoses of gonorrhoea, syphilis and HIV infections have jumped to their highest levels in years, prompting concerns that a growing number of younger people are putting themselves and their partners at risk by having unprotected sex. The number of gonorrhoea diagnoses soared to 13,649 cases last year, driven by a three-fold increase in New South Wales, more than double in Victoria and a 53 per cent jump in Queensland. Syphilis infections have also risen, with 1534 cases diagnosed last year, close to the all-time high. 18 australian medicine - november Adding to public health concerns, figures simultaneously released at the Australasian HIV & AIDS Conference showed there were 2153 new HIV diagnoses in 2012 the largest number of new cases in 20 years. Associated Professor David Wilson of the Kirby Institute said the rise could not be put down to better testing alone. Some of the rise in reported HIV diagnoses may be due to an increase in testing, but better testing simply cannot explain the magnitude of these rising rates, Associate Professor Wilson said. Increases in the incidence of HIV, gonorrhoea and syphilis have coincided with evidence that an increasing number of gay men are having unprotected sex. A study by the Centre for Social Research in Health at the University of New South Wales found that almost 40 per cent of gay men with casual partners had unprotected anal intercourse in the preceding six months - up from less than 32 per cent in 2003 and 38 per cent in This behaviour was found to be particularly prevalent among men younger than 25 years. The rise in unprotected sex with casual partners has been occurring gradually over the last decade, and we re now at the highest level ever recorded in our surveys of gay and bisexual men, Centre director Professor John de Wit said. Professor de Wit linked the rise in unprotected sex among younger men to findings that they were less likely to have been exposed to HIV prevention campaigns.

19 news Bishop anointed for life-saving work A medical researcher who pioneered the discovery and treatment of a deadly virus that kills hundreds of thousands of children every year has received a top science award. Professor Ruth Bishop, who is based at the Murdoch Children s Research Institute in Melbourne, has been awarded the CSL Florey Medal in recognition of her decades of work identifying, understanding and treating the deadly rotavirus, which is estimated to cause the deaths of around 450,000 children every year. In 1973, Professor Bishop and her colleagues at the Royal Children s Hospital and the University of Melbourne s Department of Microbiology were the first in the world to discover rotavirus, an infection of the lining of the upper small intestine in young children that interferes with the body s ability to absorb fluids, causing dehydration. Around 1200 children die from the disease every day. Through decades of painstaking and determined research, Professor Bishop and her colleagues isolated the virus, examined how it spread and developed vaccines. In Australia, a rotavirus vaccine was added to the National Immunisation Program for infants in mid-2007, and the number of hospitalisations caused by the infection has plunged by more than 70 per cent since. The vaccine is now being rolled out in some of the world s poorest countries, through the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Early results from Bolivia, the first low-income country to take part in the expanded program, show a 75 per cent drop in hospitalisations due to rotavirus infection. A more advanced vaccine is currently being trialled in Indonesia and New Zealand. INFORMATION FOR MEMBERS Changes to veteran health care payment arrangements Health care subsidy arrangements for defence force veterans injured or who suffered diseases in the course of their service before mid are being changed. The Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) has announced that veterans currently eligible for benefits under the terms of the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 (SRCA) will, from early December, no longer have to seek reimbursement from the Department for care costs. From 10 December, SRCA clients will be subject to normal DVA treatment card arrangements, including the use of the DVA benefits schedule. The DVA s Principal Medical Adviser Dr Graeme Killer admitted that the change would in some cases result in lower payments to providers. But Dr Killer said both providers and their patients would benefit from a smoother, faster, and more convenient and consistent payments process. Currently, payment for the treatment of SRCA clients is processed through reimbursement arrangements, with an administrative burden for both clients and providers, he said. This involves seeking prior approval from the DVA for most services, before sending invoices in to either be paid to the treating provider, or as a reimbursement to clients for payments they have made. Dr Killer said bringing the assessment and processing of payments for SRCA patients in line with those of the broader veteran community would benefit all. It is understood that in some situations the use of the DVA schedule will result in a lesser payment to providers, he said. However, using the card will benefit providers, as there will be greater consistency across procedures when dealing with [the] DVA, faster turnaround in payment for services, and reduction in administrative burden on practices. australian medicine - november

20 news INFORMATION FOR MEMBERS AMA Careers Advisory Service From graduates preparing their first resume to experienced doctors seeking to carve out a new career path in the Commonwealth public service, the AMA Careers Advisory Service has been on hand to provide practical advice and information. Since the Service was launched in September 2012, AMA Careers Consultant, Kathryn Morgan, has handled dozens of inquiries from members looking for help and advice on advancing their careers, both within medicine and beyond. The Careers website, which is at: gives members access to both general and specific careers advice and information. In addition to direct links to external websites and specific sources of information, the Service also offers practical advice for medical professionals as their medical careers advance. The Careers Service provides information and support relevant to all stages of an individual s career, from medical students looking for assistance preparing internship applications - particularly writing resumes and covering letters - through to doctors in training who want to brush up their interview skills to give them a competitive edge at allimportant medical college interviews. But the Service is not only there for those in the early stages of their medical careers. It has also helped qualified medical professionals looking to apply their skills and expertise in jobs beyond medical practice. Among these have been those looking for non-clinical roles in Commonwealth and State public services that take advantage of their skills and experience. The Service is constantly updating content on its website, including listings of career-related events being staged across the country, and uses feedback from members to help add and develop resources. Members are encouraged to visit the website, if they haven t done so already, and we welcome feedback, which can be submitted via the online feedback form on the website. There will be further updates on developments in the Careers Service in coming months as we develop more ways to assist members along their medical career path. If you or your colleagues would like to convene a skills workshop facilitated by Kathryn, please contact her at: Phone: (02) (toll free) Intact PIP implants given qualified all-clear A high-level European scientific committee has found that there is no convincing reason for PIP breast implants to be removed unless they have ruptured. In a conclusion that brings to end a string of inquiries and reports on the implants, which were subject to a worldwide recall after it was discovered they were being manufactured using substandard silicone, the European Commission s Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks found that there was no convincing medical, toxicological or other data to justify removal of intact PIP implants as a precautionary approach. The Therapeutic Goods Administration said the finding was in line with its own assessment and, while it would continue to monitor failure rates of the implant, it was not planning any further investigations. According to figures collected by the TGA, there were 490 confirmed ruptures of PIP implants, and a further 24 unconfirmed ruptures, as of 10 October. The regulator said it had been found that PIP implants had higher concentrations of several cyclic siloxanes than other silicone breast implants, but they were non-toxic and were not shown to be an irritant. Neither implant rupture, nor local inflammation, has been found to be associated with breast cancer or anaplastic large cell lymphoma, the TGA said. While there are differences in rupture rates, there is no reliable evidence that ruptured PIP implants create a greater health risk than a ruptured silicone implant from another manufacturer. Nonetheless, the regulator strongly advised that where rupture occurred, the implant be removed, adding that widespread concern regarding undetected ruptures meant there is a need for women with PIP breast implants to seek regular clinical examinations. 20 australian medicine - november

Key Priority Areas Key Priority Area 1: Improving access and reducing inequity Key Direction for Change Primary health care is delivered through an integrated service system which provides more uniform

Introduction Chapter 5 Private health insurance 5.1 The private health insurance industry in Australia comprises 34 private health insurers. At the end of 2012 13, 47 per cent of the Australian population

NATIONAL HEALTHCARE AGREEMENT 2012 Council of Australian Governments An agreement between the Commonwealth of Australia and the States and Territories, being: t t t t t t t t the State of New South Wales;

Submission on the National Registration and Accreditation Scheme Partially Regulated Occupations The Australian Medical Council Limited (AMC) welcomes the opportunity to make a submission to the Practitioner

Identification GETTING STARTED 3 This is Booklet 3 in the Getting Started Series. Getting Started is a guide for people leaving prison. Booklets 1 The First Week 2 Housing 3 Identification 4 Alcohol and

finding the balance between public and private health the example of australia By Zoe McKenzie, Senior Researcher This note provides an overview of the principal elements of Australia s public health system,

MLC Insurance Your guide to Best Doctors A unique service for clients with MLC insurance With over 120 years of looking after Australians, we re proud to bring Best Doctors exclusively to you as a client

Health Alert November 2013 Workplace safety for mental health workers In recent months there has been an increased media focus on the safety of mental health workers who need to deal with violent and aggressive

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Workers / Practitioners in focus i Contents Introduction... 1 What is an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Worker?... 2 How are Aboriginal and Torres

NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR FOOD SECURITY IN REMOTE INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES Council of Australian Governments A Strategy agreed between: the Commonwealth of Australia and the States and Territories, being: the

Mental illness and life insurance What you need to know a detailed guide This information sheet was produced in association with Mental illness and life insurance What you need to know - a detailed guide

26 November 2013 National Commission of Audit Commonwealth Government of Australia Email: submissions@ncoagov.au Dear Commission nib health funds limited (nib) We welcome the opportunity to make a submission

The National Health Plan for Young Australians An action plan to protect and promote the health of children and young people Copyright 1997 ISBN 0 642 27200 X This work is copyright. It may be reproduced

SUBMISSION November 2015 SUBMISSION TO THE MEDICARE BENEFITS SCHEDULE REVIEW TASKFORCE Submission by the Chiropractors Association of Australia Page 1 of 10 About the Chiropractors Association of Australia

Guidelines on endorsement as a nurse practitioner 7160 Introduction The National Registration and Accreditation Scheme (the National Scheme) for health professionals in Australia commenced on 1 July 2010

BEING A LONG WAY FROM THE NEAREST TOWN IS NO LONGER A BARRIER TO ACCESSING HEALTH SERVICES WOOF! 08 Other health payments and activities Medicare OTHER HEALTH PAYMENTS AND ACTIVITIES 1 Medical Indemnity

1 Sustaining the PBS for the future Dr Brendan Shaw, Chief Executive, Medicines Australia Speech to 2 nd Future of Medicare Conference 11 November 2010, Sydney Thank you for the opportunity to speak with

Understanding NICE guidance Information for people who use NHS services Borderline personality disorder NICE clinical guidelines advise the NHS on caring for people with specific conditions or diseases

The Mind guide to insurance cover and mental health guide to insurance cover and mental health The Mind guide to insurance cover and mental health This booklet is for anyone who wants to know how a mental

MEDIA RELEASE 4 th FEBRUARY 2013 A new landmark report being launched today at Parliament House shows that $111,000 can be saved per year per offender by diverting non-violent Indigenous offenders with

ISSUE 5 The Decision Assist Project Update is a bimonthly summary of key news and events from the Decision Assist program. Funded by the Australian Government, Decision Assist aims to build capacity, linkages

4: Rights, Responsibilities and Tips for Employees 44 4: Rights, Responsibilities and Tips for Employees IN SHORT WORKSHOP HANDOUT WHO 13 Rights Responsibilities and Tips for Employees WorkChoices is estimated

Guidelines Effective from: 1 October 2016 Guidelines for registered medical practitioners who perform cosmetic medical and surgical procedures Introduction These guidelines have been developed by the Medical

Guidelines on the provision of Sustainable eye care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians (Note: These Guidelines should not be used as a substitute for statutory responsibilities. Optometrists

Submission to the Private Health Insurance Consultations 2015-16 The AMA welcomes the opportunity to provide a submission to the Private Health Insurance Consultations 2015-16. The Review will no doubt

Submission to the Parliament of Australia Senate Community Affairs Committee Enquiry into Health Policy, Administration and Expenditure September 2014 Introduction The Australian Women s Health Network

Response to the New Brunswick Government Consultation on a Prescription Drug Plan for Uninsured New Brunswickers Brief submitted by The New Brunswick Nurses Union April 2012 Background The New Brunswick

SUBMISSION INQUIRY INTO THE SUPPLY OF DENTAL PROSTHESIS Oral Health Professionals Association Page 1 13 TABLE OF CONTENTS This submission reviews the current market for the sourcing and supply of custom

Australian Health System How is it structured? Presentation to Indonesian Delegation Prof. Michael Reid June 2014 Economy Australia Overview and Key Facts Australia has a market economy, the thirteenth

GUARANTEED 50 PLUS LIFE COVER A simple, affordable way to give peace of mind to the people who matter most Want to know more? Please talk to your adviser The average cost of a burial in the UK is currently

DEALING WITH WORKPLACE BULLYING - A WORKER S GUIDE NOVEMBER 2013 Safe Work Australia is an Australian Government statutory agency established in 2009. Safe Work Australia consists of representatives of

Ensuring Best Practice in the Notification of Prescription Medical Product Discontinuations TGA and Medicines Australia Conjoint Best Practice Guidelines October 2007 1 Ensuring Best Practice in the Notification

June 2015 Going to a Mental Health Tribunal hearing Includes: information about compulsory treatment and treatment orders information about Mental Health Tribunal hearings worksheets to help you represent

www.pwc.com.au Australian Federal Budget 2014 Health May 2014 It is time to talk about Health In 2013, one of the striking things about the election campaign was the limited focus upon health policy. Some

Obama Administration Record on Health Care Today, two years after we passed health care reform, more young adults have insurance, more seniors are saving money on their prescription drugs, and more Americans

Understanding Medicare Summary Medicare covers the cost of treatment in public hospitals and subsidises the cost of a wide range of health services and medications. You may choose only to have Medicare

Intern training National standards for programs Introduction These national standards outline requirements for processes, systems and resources that contribute to good quality intern training. Health services

Housing Affordability Report MARCH QUARTER Housing affordability improves on the back of falling interest rates as loan sizes rise and incomes stall The first quarter of showed an improvement in housing

Are you buying private medical insurance? Take a look at this guide before you decide 2008 2 Private medical insurance Private medical insurance 3 Contents 1 About this guide 4 2 What is private medical

Welcome to Simplyhealth s monthly news bulletin. Each month Andy Couchman, a recognised industry expert and publisher of the Protection Review, gives an update on what is going on in the world of health

Sick at work Health... The cost of presenteeism to your business, employees and the economy. May 2007 Application Forms In 2005-06, the cost of presenteeism to the Australian economy was estimated to be

Are you buying private medical insurance? Take a look at this guide before you decide 2008 2 Private medical insurance Private medical insurance 3 Contents 1. About this guide 4 2. What is private medical

Heart information Cardiac rehabilitation Contents 2 What is cardiac rehabilitation? 3 What are the benefits of cardiac rehabilitation? 4 Who should take part in cardiac rehabilitation? 4 When does cardiac

DOCTORS, NURSES AND THE PAY FREEZE MARTYN GODDARD THE Crown Employees (Salaries) Bill 2014 is, perhaps unintentionally, the most radical piece of industrial relations legislation to be put forward by a

for England 21 January 2009 2 NHS Constitution The NHS belongs to the people. It is there to improve our health and well-being, supporting us to keep mentally and physically well, to get better when we

Optus Submission to Productivity Commission Inquiry into National Frameworks for Workers Compensation and Occupational Health and Safety June 2003 Overview Optus welcomes the opportunity to provide this

Successful Solar Exposure Campaigns and Regulation of The Use of Sunbeds: The Australian Experience Terry Slevin Chair, National Skin Cancer Committee Chair, Occupational and Environmental Cancer Committee

Page 1 of 10 Key Features of the Affordable Care Act, By Year On March 23, 2010, President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act. The law puts in place comprehensive health insurance reforms that will roll

NATIONAL REGISTRATION AND ACCREDITATION SCHEME FOR THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS Chiropractic Boards response 15 December 2008 CONSULTATION PAPER Proposed arrangements for accreditation Issued by the Practitioner

Office of the Small Business Commissioner 2 Office of the Small Business Commissioner Overview NSW has a relative advantage as the most populous Australian state and home to the largest concentration of

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Canberra Cat. no. IHW 97 Healthy for Life Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services Report Card Key findings We have done well in: Increasing the proportion

SUMMARY PAPER A COMPARISON OF PATIENT CHARTERS IN AUSTRALIA This Summary Paper has been prepared by the Commission office. The range of patient rights and responsibilities that it contains were sourced

Workers Compensation Cuts: One Year On A report by Unions NSW highlighting the real impacts the O Farrell Government s changes to the workers compensation system are having on the people of NSW. Introduction

Case studies 1-7: Please note these are fictional case studies from the GMC s Patients help web section, to help patients understand about the process for complaining about a doctor. Case study 1 - Eileen,

the compensation myth The Compensation Myth It is common to hear stories of the Compensation Culture or claims that Britain is becoming Risk Averse as a result of people claiming compensation. The truth

Supporting information for appraisal and revalidation During their annual appraisals, doctors will use supporting information to demonstrate that they are continuing to meet the principles and values set

Screening for Prostate Cancer It is now clear that screening for Prostate Cancer discovers the disease at an earlier and more curable stage. It is not yet clear whether this translates into reduced mortality

To ensure the functioning of the site, we use cookies. We share information about your activities on the site with our partners and Google partners: social networks and companies engaged in advertising and web analytics. For more information, see the Privacy Policy and Google Privacy &amp Terms.
Your consent to our cookies if you continue to use this website.